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Bob LaPointe : ウィキペディア英語版
Bob LaPointe

Bob LaPointe (November 5, 1945 – January 31, 2012) was an American football coach in Michigan from 1968 through 2010. He is best known for winning Michigan's Class B high school state championship in 1975, and for serving as interim head coach at Eastern Michigan University for part of the 1982 season.
From 1974 through 1977, LaPointe was the head coach at Divine Child High School in Dearborn, Michigan, where his team went undefeated and won a state championship in 1975.
In 1978, newly hired Eastern Michigan University head coach Mike Stock brought LaPointe to the university.〔 Three games into the 1982 season Stock was fired, immediately after losing his twenty-second consecutive game, the major-college longest losing streak in the country. LaPointe was named the interim head coach,〔 and the school immediately began a nationwide search for a new coach.〔 〕 The team received widespread attention for their various attempts to end the streak, which included "bringing a coffin to the locker room before the game...as a reminder to kill the streak", and hiring a local hypnotist. The team lost his first five games as head coach, two by a single point each, before defeating Kent State 9–7, ending a school-record 27-game losing streak that had lasted more than two years.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Eastern Michigan Yearly Results 1980-1984 )〕 For the following season, Jim Harkema was brought in as head coach.〔
In the mid-1980s, LaPointe coached high school football at Notre Dame High School in Harper Woods, Michigan, before going to Belleville High School in Belleville, Michigan, where he remaining for nearly 20 years until his retirement in 2010.〔 While at Belleville High School he coached eventual National Football League players Kris Jenkins, Cullen Jenkins, and Ian Gold.〔
He died in 2012.
〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Coaching Records Game By Game: Bob LaPointe )
==References==



抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Bob LaPointe」の詳細全文を読む



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